dot pitch


dot pitch

[′dät ‚pich] (graphic arts) The width of a dot in a dot matrix.

dot pitch

(hardware)The distance between a dot and the closest dot ofthe same colour (red, green or blue) on a color CRT. Dotpitch is typically from 0.28 to 0.51 mm but large presentationmonitors may go up to 1.0 mm. The smaller the dot pitch, thecrisper the image, 0.31 or less provides a sharp image,especially when displaying text.

Dot pitch measurements between conventional tubes and Sony'sTrinitron tubes are roughly, but not exactly comparable.Sony's CRTs use vertical stripes, not dots, and itsmeasurement is the distance between stripes, not the diagonaldistance between dots.

["The Computer Glossary", Alan Freedman].

dot pitch

The distance between a red (or green or blue) dot and the closest red (or green or blue) dot on a color monitor. Also known as "pixel pitch." The smaller the dot pitch, measured in fractions of millimeters, the crisper the image. For example, a .28 dot pitch means dots are 28/100ths of a millimeter apart. A dot pitch of .31 or less provides a sharp image, especially on text.

On CRTs, the dot pitch is typically from .28 to .51mm, while large presentation monitors may go up to 1mm. On LCD monitors, dot pitch is typically from .16 to .29mm. On microdisplay-based rear-projection TVs, the dot pitch may measure the microdisplay's pixels, not the pixels on the viewer's screen. Thus, an 8µm rear-projection dot pitch is not 30 times smaller than a .24mm (240µm) dot pitch on a CRT or flat panel display, because 8µm refers to the source pixel, while .24mm is the screen pixel (what you see). See rear-projection TV and slot pitch.